Swimming Pool Injuries
Every year the joys of summer are marred by tragedy when swimmers drown or are permanently injured in near-drowning accidents. It takes only five minutes and less than two inches of water for a small child to drown, and it may all happen silently. It can be over in the time it takes to answer the telephone. It has been estimated that as many as 350 children under the age of 5 drown in pools each year and another 2,600 are treated for near-drowning incidents.
There are other dangers too, especially of spinal injuries or paralysis from diving into too shallow water or injury from slips and falls. Cases involving swimming injuries on private or commercial property fall into three general categories, while claims against governmental entities are somewhat different.
Faulty Products
Poor Maintenance
Carelessness
Faulty Products
Some swimming-related injuries are caused by poorly designed or faulty products. In legal terms, a lawsuit based on this kind of injury is called a product liability case, and it can be brought against the manufacturer of the faulty product, a component manufacturer, or various parties involved in marketing the product. Faulty products can include things like a drain cover that catches a foot and causes a swimmer to drown, a pool cover with sharp edges that causes cuts or abrasions, a gas heater that explodes, or a sump pump that shorts and causes electrocution. Sometimes the design of the pool itself has been found faulty, especially when it is difficult to see where the pool is deep enough to dive or when the shallow and deep areas are not clearly marked on the pool.
Products used in and around the pool can also cause drowning or serious injury. Water slides, for example, can cause injuries if they have attachments where people can become entangled or have weak areas that may give way and result in falls. Flotation devices for babies and small children sometimes have faulty fasteners or weak areas that cause children to fall into the water. These should never be used without an adult standing next to the child. Children are sometimes impaled on sharp diving toys or injured by toys like water guns if pieces of the toy can become projectiles.
Poor Maintenance
Injuries in or around swimming pools often happen because the owner or operator of the property hasn’t maintained the property or equipment in a reasonably safe condition. In legal terms, liability for this kind of carelessness is called premises liability. Both the owner of the land and the operator or possessor of the land is sometimes named as a defendant in this kind of case. Interpretations of what is a reasonably safe condition differ from state to state, and some states have different rules about the duty of the landowner to protect people who have been invited; people who haven’t been invited, but are there legally (i.e. a meter reader); and trespassers, who don’t have right to be on the property at all. Be sure to find out the specific interpretations used in your locality. The same standard is usually applied to both private homes and commercial areas.
Carelessness
Many accidents in and around swimming pools and other swimming areas happen because the owner or possessor (tenant or management company) of the land has been careless and hasn’t taken enough care to protect the people swimming or otherwise using the area for recreation. The legal term for this carelessness is “negligence,” and this kind of case can be brought against the owner and or the possessor of the property. Accidents not caused by poor maintenance often involve a failure to properly supervise swimmers or failure to keep the area safe for those who use it. Owners of pools have a responsibility to guests to keep the pool area safe, and must keep the pool inaccessible to small children.
Small children are the most frequent victims of drowning accidents, and the pool owner or operator, public or private, has a duty to protect them. This may involve: fencing to prevent small children from entering, a gate with a latch too high for them to reach, a cover when the pool isn’t in use and motion alarms to alert the owner that children are present.
Pool owners should have safety equipment like a shepherd’s hook and a ring buoy in good condition and quickly available. It would be a good idea to also have a first aid kit and a spinal board available, since diving accidents often cause spinal injuries.
Clear signs should be posted warning of all dangers, and it is a good idea to post and enforce prohibitions on diving, running, swimming while intoxicated, or swimming without supervision (for both adults and children). Pool owners should clearly inform visiting parents that children are not allowed to swim without adult supervision and that the parents are responsible for that supervision.
Owners of property with natural swimming areas like rivers, ponds, or lakes have a duty to remove hazards like broken glass or wood with old nails and to warn people about possible natural dangers like whirlpools, swift currents, or unclean water. State recreational use statutes may relieve them of some or all of this duty if they open the area to the public for free.
Swimming accidents can trigger a number of complex legal issues, such as product liability, negligence and premises liability. This coupled with the fact that injured parties only have a certain amount of time to sue (the state’s statute of limitations) or they lose their right to sue for their injuries, makes it important to seek the advice of a personal injury attorney if you believe you are entitled to compensation for medical bills, pain and suffering, and the like.
source: Legal Advice